The alarm query to evaluate and the notification destination to use when the alarm is in the firing state, along with other alarm properties. Alarms passively monitor your cloud resources using metrics in Monitoring.

A special type of IAM group that contains instances that match rules that you define (thus the membership can change dynamically as matching instances are terminated or launched). These instances act as "principal" actors and can make API calls to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure services according to IAM policies that you write for the dynamic group.

A public IP address (and related properties) that is temporary and exists for the life of the instance it's assigned to. It can be assigned only to the primary private IP on a VNIC. Compare with reserved public IP.

A bare metal or virtual machine (VM) compute host. The image used to launch the instance determines its operating system and other software. The shape specified during the launch process determines the number of CPUs and memory allocated to the instance.

The secure connection between a dynamic routing gateway (DRG) and customer-premises equipment (CPE), consisting of multiple IPSec tunnels. The IPSec connection is one of the components forming a site-to-site VPN between a virtual cloud network (VCN) and your on-premises network.

An optional virtual router that you can add to your VCN to perform Network Address Translation (NAT). A NAT gateway gives cloud resources without public IP addresses access to the internet without exposing those resources to incoming internet connections.

An IAM document that specifies who has what type of access to your resources. It is used in different ways: to mean an individual statement written in the policy language; to mean a collection of statements in a single, named "policy" document (which has an Oracle Cloud ID (OCID) assigned to it); and to mean the overall body of policies your organization uses to control access to resources.

One of the ways to use FastConnect. Private peering lets you extend your existing infrastructure into a virtual cloud network (VCN) in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (for example, to implement a hybrid cloud, or a lift and shift scenario). Communication across the connection is with IPv4 private addresses (typically RFC 1918).

An object that contains a public IP address and related properties. You control whether each private IP on an instance has an assigned public IP. There are two types: reserved public IPs and ephemeral public IPs.

One of the way to use FastConnect. Public peering lets your on-premises network access public services in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure without using the internet. For example, Object Storage, the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Console and APIs, or public load balancers in your VCN. Communication across the connection is with IPv4 public IP addresses. Without FastConnect, the traffic destined for public IP addresses would be routed over the internet. With FastConnect, that traffic goes over your private physical connection.

A subnet that spans all availability domains (ADs) in the region. Oracle recommends using regional subnets because they are more flexible and make it easier to implement failover across ADs. Compare with AD-specific subnets.

A public IP address (and related properties) that you create in your tenancy and assign to your instances in a given region as you like. It persists in your tenancy until you delete it. It can be assigned to any private IP on a given VNIC, not just the primary private IP. Compare with ephemeral private IP.

An optional virtual router that you can add to your VCN. The gateway enables cloud resources to privately access Oracle services (such as Object Storage and Autonomous Database) without exposing the resources to the public internet.

(Deprecated. Use an auth token to authenticate with your Swift client.) Swift is the OpenStack object store service. A Swift password enables you to use an existing Swift client with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Object Storage.

Used with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure FastConnect. An isolated network path that runs over one or more physical network connections to provide a single, logical connection between the edge of your existing network and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.

A VNIC enables an instance to connect to a VCN and determines how the instance connects with endpoints inside and outside the VCN. Each instance automatically comes with a primary VNIC, and you can add secondary ones.

A VNIC enables an instance to connect to a VCN and determines how the instance connects with endpoints inside and outside the VCN. Each instance automatically comes with a primary VNIC, and you can add secondary ones.